No Deal? Loonie Slides After “Secret Insulting Remarks” By Trump, Downbeat Freeland NAFTA Comments

With just hours to go until the Trump-imposed deadline to reach a NAFTA deal between the US and Canada, moments ago Chrystia Freeland poured cold water on hopes of an imminent deal, saying “we are not there yet” on a NAFTA deal.

Below are her comments moments ago to the press after speaking to the USTR , courtesy of Bloomberg

  • Freeland says she’ll return to talks at USTR later Friday
  • Canadians are good at finding “win-win compromises,” says Freeland, adding “at the end of the day though we are only going to sign a deal that’s good for Canada”
  • “In this negotiation we always stand up for the national interest and that’s what we’re going to continue to do”
  • Canada is looking for a good deal, “not just any deal,” says Freeland
  • Freeland says she agreed with U.S. Trade Representative Robert Lighthizer at start of the week to refrain from negotiating “specific issues in public”
  • Freeland says she jokes with Lighthizer “that we could switch chairs” because they know each others’ positions on the Nafta issues so well

Freeland also said that she would be back later in the day at the USTR for more NAFTA talks, but said she wouldn’t discuss specific NAFTA issues in Public:

Trudeau also chimed in some skeptically at the same time:

  • *TRUDEAU SAYS CANADA WILL ONLY SIGN `GOOD’ NAFTA DEAL
  • *TRUDEAU SAYS A WIN-WIN-WIN NAFTA DEAL REMAINS POSSIBLE
  • *TRUDEAU SAYS NO NAFTA AGREEMENT IS BETTER THAN A BAD ONE

Following the downbeat comments, the loonie slumped to session lows of 1.3080

But the punchline is what the Toronto Star reported earlier, namely that “High-stakes trade negotiations between Canada and the U.S. were dramatically upended on Friday morning by inflammatory secret remarks from President Donald Trump, after the remarks were obtained by the Toronto Star.”

In remarks Trump wanted to be “off the record,” Trump told Bloomberg News reporters on Thursday, according to a source, that he is not making any compromises at all in the talks with Canada — but that he cannot say this publicly because “it’s going to be so insulting they’re not going to be able to make a deal.”

“Here’s the problem. If I say no — the answer’s no. If I say no, then you’re going to put that, and it’s going to be so insulting they’re not going to be able to make a deal…I can’t kill these people,” he said of the Canadian government.

In another remark he did not want published, Trump said, according to the source, that the possible deal with Canada would be “totally on our terms.” He suggested he was scaring the Canadians into submission by repeatedly threatening to impose tariffs.

“Off the record, Canada’s working their ass off. And every time we have a problem with a point, I just put up a picture of a Chevrolet Impala,” Trump said, according to the source. The Impala is produced at the General Motors plant in Oshawa, Ontario.

The Star is Canada’s most widely read publication, so now that the US president has set up the strawman, any possibility of a deal going thru is suddenly looking very slim.

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Nashville Soccer Stadium Deal Will Gift Land Worth $20 Million to Team’s Billionaire Owners

Sports stadiums are notoriously bad deals for taxpayers, but Nashville’s proposed plan to build a soccer-specific stadium on the city’s old fairgrounds adds a new wrinkle. The stadium itself, while probably unnecessary, might not be as bad for taxpayers as what the city plans to do with 10 acres of land right next door.

In order to get the prospective team’s owners to agree to a less-than-ideal location—the fairgrounds are well outside of Nashville’s densely packed downtown—city officials agreed to gift an additional 10 acres of land adjacent to the 10 acres that will be used for the stadium. There the team’s owners plan to build apartments, office buildings, a 200-room hotel, and plenty of bars and restaurants. The soccer stadium, they argue, will be the centerpiece of Nashville’s next hip enclave.

While some members of the Metro Council object to the very idea of privatizing public land, that isn’t bad in itself. Those 10 acres will bring more economic benefit to the city and more use to residents if they can be privately developed.

The land will also be considerably more valuable. A new assessment of that 10-acre parcel found that it would be worth more than $20 million after it is rezoned to allow mixed-use development. But throughout the stadium debate, Nashville’s Metro Council has told residents that the land is worth a mere $11 million—a figure that did not take into account the rezoning. Nashville, bear in mind, faced a budget shortfall earlier this year and may have to renege on promises to give raises to teachers. Giving away land that could be sold for more than $20 million probably wouldn’t make sense even if the city was flush with cash, but it seems particularly foolish at a time when tax hikes are being discussed.

The new assessment makes the deal look twice as bad for taxpayers—and makes the free land look twice as good for the prospective team’s billionaire owners: John Ingram, one of the heirs to an estimated $15 billion fortune, and Zygi Wilf, who successfully swindled the taxpayers of Minneapolis out of nearly $500 million to build a new glass palace for the Minnesota Vikings.

The Nashville area Metro Council is set to vote next Tuesday on a number of stadium-related bills, including a $225 million revenue bond that will fund its construction, a $50 million general obligation bond to cover demolition of fairgrounds buildings, and the all-important rezoning of those additional 10 acres of land.

The final votes are expected to be contentious. A preliminary council meeting on Monday was packed with stadium opponents dressed in red and stadium supporters waving the blue and yellow scarves of Nashville SC, a lower-level team that already plays in the city. After an hour of back and forth, the council voted 20–9, with 11 members either absent or not voting, to advance the proposal to next week’s final hearing. But the final vote is far from a sure bet, since a super-majority of 27 votes will be required to pass some of the bills.

Taxpayers are already on the hook for $300 million in upgrades to Nissan Stadium, home of the National Football League’s Tennessee Titans. That stadium is within walking distance of downtown and could easily be adapted to host soccer games. In fact, Nissan Stadium has regularly hosted the U.S. men’s and women’s national soccer teams. Teams from the English Premier League, widely regarded as the top soccer league in the world, have played there. It’s also one of the stadiums proposed as a site for the 2026 World Cup. Why exactly does the city need a new soccer-specific stadium?

Major League Soccer (MLS) says it will not consider expansion bids that do not include soccer-specific stadiums as part of the plan, but the league has been happy to look the other way in places like Seattle and Atlanta, where soccer teams share NFL stadiums. Another MLS team plays in Yankee Stadium—awkwardly, since baseball fields and soccer fields are not really compatible—and the league allows that.

“MLS has two overriding goals: To get as many deep-pocketed new owners as they can, and to get as many new stadiums as they can for those owners—preferably paid for as much as possible by somebody else,” Neil deMause, the author of Field of Schemes and a sharp critic of MLS’s long-term viability, tells Reason. “This isn’t about what the teams need, it’s about what the league can demand in tribute.”

DeMause thins Nashville’s stadium plan is pretty typical for mid-sized soccer-only stadiums: The team is putting up most of the money and getting public subsidies to help, and then the owners get to keep all the revenue. Funding a stadium with revenue bonds—to be paid back by a portion of ticket and concession sales—is better than handing over a bunch of money to the team’s owners.

But of course Nashville is doing that too, by handing over those 10 acres of land to the team’s owners.

Councilman John Cooper says the selection of the fairgrounds site was a mistake from the beginning. In the rush to get the stadium approved, he says, the Metro Council never considered alternative locations or whether the public was getting adequately compensated for the loss of the land.

“It’s taking from one group to give to an in-favor group,” he tells Reason. “It’s pretty ruthless.”

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What Could Robert Mueller Reveal Today From His “Secret Files”? 

On Thursday evening, MSNBC’s Chuck Todd suggested that Robert Mueller might make a major Friday announcement in the ongoing Trump-Russia-Pornstar-Kitchen Sink investigation, as an announcement after Labor Day could be viewed as interference in the midterm elections

“I think he knows, more than anything, he keeps quiet between Labor Day and Election Day,” Chuck Todd said and then issued the following preview: “I’m not missing work tomorrow,” he continued. “I wouldn’t miss work tomorrow. Tomorrow is the last business day of the pre-Labor Day to Election Day window.” (3:30 mins into the video).

Today, Axios is out with a list of evidence which might be in Mueller’s “secret files” for a Friday release. As former Obama White House counsel Bob Bauer told the news outlet; “Investigators have the skills and resources to turn up evidence, including witness testimony, that goes beyond what anyone on the outside can imagine in the daily speculation about the Mueller probe.” 

Here’s the evidence we have yet to see via Axios

  • President Trump’s tax returns.
  • Trump bank records, which are more valuable than tax returns.
  • Internal Trump Organization records.
  • More recordings from Michael Cohen.
  • Cellphone records (metadata showing calls placed/received and duration) related to the Trump Tower meeting.
  • White House and campaign emails and text messages. (Trump’s legal team said in January that the White House had produced more than 20,000 pages of materials, and the campaign had provided more than 1.4 million pages.)
  • Contemporaneous notes of White House staffers from meetings with Trump.
  • A full reconstruction by former national security adviser Michael Flynn, who made a plea deal, of his conversations about Russia and subsequent lies.
  • Scores of hours of testimony of Trump insiders (including at least 20 White House personnel) about his private dealings, much of which is unknown to POTUS and the public.
  • National Enquirer files revealed by today’s N.Y. Times: Trump and Cohen “devised a plan to buy up all the dirt on Mr. Trump that the National Enquirer and its parent company had collected on him, dating back to the 1980s.”
  • As MSNBC analyst Matt Miller summarized: “Basically, everything!”

And like most earth-shattering announcements, we would imagine anything coming out of the special counsel would likely occur after market hours. 

As one guest on Meet The Press noted, if nothing comes out now – Mueller’s team will probably wait until January to drop bombs, should they have any. 

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People Love To Move To States Paul Krugman Hates Most

Authored by Robert Murphy via The Mises Institute,

In a recent column titled, “Capitalism, Socialism, and Unfreedom,”Paul Krugman lambasted libertarians for equating “freedom” with minimal government. He ridiculed the recently updated Cato index that ranks the 50 U.S. states according to their “freedom” defined in this fashion. Because he lives in New York state—which came in dead last in the Cato ranking—Krugman sarcastically asked a “comrade commissar” in his piece for permission to talk, and in his tweet promoting the column, Krugman said he was writing “from the socialist hellhole of Manhattan.” Besides mocking the (apparent) libertarian claim that New York state was somehow dangerously low in freedom, Krugman’s substantive point was that Americans value other things besides freedom from government intervention. For example, workers in New York state might enjoy the relatively strong unions and Medicaid coverage. Yet as I’ll point out, Krugman’s column is riddled with problems — even his jokes blow up in his face.

Krugman Is “Free” From Self-Awareness

Before diving into the meat of the dispute, let me note something hilarious: Literally the day after Krugman mocks the Cato Institute for ranking U.S. states according to their freedom—such that the state in last place, New York, must be a “socialist hellhole” ha ha—Krugman wrote a column warning his readers that freedom was on the verge of disappearing in America:

As you can see in the screenshot above of Krugman’s archive, on Aug. 26 he pooh-poohed the libertarian warnings about Big Government, and then on Aug. 27 Krugman was warning about autocracy coming in the back door.

What makes Krugman’s 24-hour turnabout even more hilarious is that his Aug. 27 piece relies on alleged examples of Republicans in state governments violating democratic principles. So to sum up: Krugman says the Cato Institute is a bunch of paranoid nutjobs for arguing that New York state has the lowest freedom in the country, but Krugman is allowed to argue that the Republicans in (say) North Carolina are implementing our version of European fascism.

Having Fun With Statistics

In order to show just how (supposedly) silly the Cato study is, Krugman produces a scatter plot pitting the Cato score of a state’s “freedom” against that state’s infant mortality rate. He displays his chart with the following commentary:

The other day I had some fun with the Cato Institute index of economic freedom across states, which finds Florida the freest and New York the least free. (Is it OK for me to write this, comrade commissar?) As I pointed out, freedom Cato-style seems to be associated with, among other things, high infant mortality. Live free and die! (New Hampshire is just behind Florida.)

Before pointing out the problems with it, let’s make sure we understand Krugman’s ostensible point: In the x-axis above, we have a state’s Cato freedom score. (The higher the number, the more freedom.) The y-axis shows the infant mortality rate; the higher the score, the more infants who die. Although he doesn’t mention it in the column, if you follow the link you’ll see Krugman explain that the size of the dot is proportional to a state’s population; that’s why California is so big.

So Krugman is arguing that there is a positive correlation between these two variables, meaning that as you increase a state’s freedom (as Cato measures it), you tend to get a higher infant mortality. Thus, Krugman thinks he has shown just how silly this measure is, and why serious analysts shouldn’t be so simple-minded in focusing on libertarian objectives.

There are several problems with Krugman’s (tongue-in-cheek) analysis. First, notice the rhetorical sleight-of-hand that I put in bold in the quotation above: Krugman tweaks New Hampshire’s “Live Free Or Die” motto, to say “Live Free AND Die,” and then adds, “New Hampshire is just behind Florida.”

But hang on a second. New Hampshire is just behind Florida in its ranking of freedom; that’s why New Hampshire is almost as far to the right as Florida is. (In other words, New Hampshire is ranked #2 in the Cato list, while Florida is #1.)

Yet ironically, as Krugman’s own chart shows, New Hampshire has just about the lowest infant mortality of the 50 states. (This CDC ranking says in 2016 New Hampshire’s infant mortality was the second-lowest in the country, behind only Vermont.)

Thus, Krugman’s joke doesn’t make any sense. The state whose motto he is mocking does indeed live up to its reputation of freedom; it is ranked #2 according to Cato’s measure. Yet it also has the second-lowest rate of infant mortality too. Yet someone reading Krugman’s column and seeing “New Hampshire is just behind Florida,” in conjunction with Krugman’s joke, might have assumed Krugman meant that New Hampshire had a bad mortality rate. (After all, it doesn’t make sense for Krugman to be pointing out New Hampshire on the chart if it completely violated his “point.”)

Stepping back, even the scatter plot as a whole, doesn’t really accomplish what Krugman wants. Visually, he is seeing what he wants to see: Krugman thinks it’s clear (especially if you read his tweet about it) that the best-fit line would be upward sloping in the chart. Yet that is largely because of New York and California. If you exclude them from the analysis, the remaining cloud of states looks like it might exhibit a downward slope.

We don’t need to speculate. I asked Jason Sorens, one of the co-authors on the Cato study, to crunch the numbers. He did it a few different ways. First, he included all of the states, and found that the correlation (specifically, the Pearson coefficient) between infant mortality and “freedom” was 0.20. (Keep in mind that a correlation of 1.00 occurs when two variables are perfectly positively linearly correlated, while 0.00 means they are not at all linearly correlated.) Even here, the correlation wasn’t statistically significant; there was too much variability / not enough data points to be confident in the observed relationship.

Sorens also checked my intuition: If you remove NY and CA from the data, then the correlation between infant mortality and “freedom” drops to 0.07 (meaning no real relationship one way or the other). Finally, Sorens did what he thought was the most sensible adjustment: He kept the data for all 50 states, but he controlled for a state being in the South, and for per capita income. Doing that, the correlation between infant mortality and “freedom” drops to 0.03.

Obviously, what is happening here is that there are omitted variables. It’s not that freedom per se “causes” a state to have a higher infant mortality rate. For whatever reason, in recent years, states with relatively more freedom also happen to have higher infant mortality rates, though the correlation is very weak.

Calling Krugman’s Bluff

Now I imagine Krugman would say, “Exactly! That’s my point! You libertarians narrowly look at the world in terms of freedom—as you define it, meaning freedom from government meddling in your personal life and business — but there’s more to life than Ayn Rand. If a Big Government uses its regulations and tax receipts to, say, guarantee health care and good schools, then we would expect to see high quality of life go hand-in-hand with low scores of economic freedom.”

Yet if this is the general argument Krugman would pursue, he runs into a problem. Even though he can find particular correlations that are amusing—such as looking at the most recent infant mortality data just among the 50 U.S. states—then sure, it looks like focusing narrowly on “freedom” is goofy.

But places like the Fraser Institute and Heritage Foundation have produced global rankings of countries, and there are dozens if not hundreds of empirical studies showing that “economic freedom” at the national level is indeed statistically associated with all sorts of desirable social indicators. (To avoid confusion, the Cato measure of “freedom” is broad, whereas the Fraser and Heritage rankings focus specifically on economic freedom.)

Back in 2009, Lawrence McQuillan and I did a study for Pacific Research Institute, titled “The Sizzle of Economic Freedom,” that summarized some of these findings. The full study is available here. For example, using samples covering several continents and decades of observations (the details differ from study to study), we described studies that showed economic freedom being associated with higher personal income, lower unemployment rates, faster economic growth, more business startups, and more macroeconomic stability.

This was perhaps expected. But we also showed that economic freedom was positively associated with lower levels of inequality, a cleaner environment, lower childhood mortality rates, higher life expectancies at birth, and higher measures of political freedom. (For more research along these lines, check out Fraser’s pagededicated to its freedom index.)

Which States Do Workers Prefer? Voting With Their Feet

To drive home his main point, Krugman contrasts the different forms of power/freedom that citizens in New York face, compared to Florida. (Remember that New York scored lowest on Cato’s ranking, while Florida scored the highest.)

But seriously, do the real differences between New York and Florida make New Yorkers less free? New York is a highly unionized state…Does this make NY workers less free, or does it empower them in the face of corporate power?

Also, New York has expanded Medicaid and tried to make the ACA exchanges work, so that only 8 percent of nonelderly adults are uninsured, compared with 18 percent in Florida. Are New Yorkers chafing under the heavy hand of health law, or do they feel freer knowing that they’re at much less risk of being ruined by medical emergency – or cast into the abyss if they lose their job?

If you’re a highly paid professional, it probably doesn’t make much difference. But my guess is that most workers feel at least somewhat freer in New York than they do in FL. [Krugman, bold added.]

Well, I guess it would be hard to truly get inside everybody’s head, but here’s a simple test to see which set of policies people prefer: Look at where they live. Namely, if we tend to see people moving out of states with high taxes and excessive regulations, and into states with low taxes and light regulations, then that’s pretty good evidence that Krugman is dead wrong.

Fortunately, we have a convenient map of net domestic migration that we can grab from this Business Insider article:

What this map shows is the net domestic migration into or out of a state, as a fraction of the state’s population. So to be clear, these figures exclude immigration from abroad, and just keep track of how many people “internally” moved into or out of a state, from July 1, 2016 to July 1, 2017. Positive numbers mean more people moved into a state, and negative numbers mean more people moved out, on net.

If you compare this map with Krugman’s scatter plot, you can see a general pattern: the states with low levels of economic freedom (i.e. the ones on the left in Krugman’s plot) tend to be losing population, i.e. have negative numbers in the map. For example, California lost 3.5 out of 1,000 of its population if we just consider domestic migration, while New York lost a whopping 9.6 residents out of 1,000.

In contrast, the states with high levels of economic freedom are gaining people. For example, Florida gained 7.8 per 100 residents, and New Hampshire gained 3.5.

You can try it the other way, too. For example, the Business Insider map shows that Wyoming lost 14.7 out of 1,000 of its population (in terms of internal migration).  The Cato interactive map indicates that Wyoming was ranked #38 in economic freedom (i.e. toward the bottom). In contrast, Arizona gained 9.1 per 1000 population (in this measure), and the Cato ranking says it has a freedom ranking of #9 in the country.

Now to be sure, there are some problems with my approach. Most serious, I believe that the way these calculations work, border states like California (but also Texas) get “dinged” because they have large flows of foreign immigrants coming in, who then eventually might move to internal states. Even so, that type of issue doesn’t explain away the clear pattern that holds even among the internal states.

More generally, I recognize that there are other factors at play, besides economic freedom. For example, distant places like Hawaii and Canada might have a net outflow simply because many people who are born in those states end up moving away at some point, for reasons that aren’t really due to “the low degree of economic freedom in my hometown.”

Despite these caveats, I think the aggregate flow of population among the 50 states is a much better indicator of how people subjectively evaluate the pros and cons of economic freedom. And it seems as if they tend to flock to the states that do better on Cato’s ranking. People do indeed seem to be fleeing the “socialist hellhole” where Krugman resides.

Indeed, this isn’t just my theory. I once read a Nobel economist who said:

But all too many blue states end up, in practice, letting zoning be a tool, not of good land use, but of NIMBYism, preventing the construction of new housing.

In fact, liberal (in the non-political sense) land use policy is probably the secret behind Texas economic growth: the state doesn’t offer high wages, but it does offer cheap housing even in huge metro areas.

Who was this mystery economist, who argues that Texas’ minimal zoning regulations explain its strong economy? Long-time readers know that when I’m being coy, it’s because I’m quoting Paul Krugman to make my point.

Conclusion

Paul Krugman tried to mock the idea that a ranking of U.S. states by economic freedom was a useful exercise. He put words in the authors’ mouths by sarcastically saying New York must be a “socialist hellhole”—even though literally the next day, Krugman pointed to the behavior of a few state legislatures to argue that American democracy was on the verge of disappearing.

More substantively, Krugman argued that “freedom” was only one of several things important to Americans, and that a strong government could provide other desirable goods—such as protection from employers and health insurance. Yet empirical studies show that over long stretches and across multiple countries, economic freedom really is positively associated with all sorts of measures, including not just income and GDP growth, but also a cleaner environment, lower childhood mortality, and measures of political freedom.

Finally, even if we restrict our attention to the U.S., we see that Americans tend to move out of low-freedom states and into high-freedom states. Believe it or not, Prof. Krugman, most people don’t share your enthusiasm for Big Government.

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Arizona Supreme Court Blocks Proposed Tax Hike, Saying It’s Too Confusing

A proposed ballot initiative in Arizona would have raised money for public schools by hiking taxes. But it won’t be on the ballot this November because its description is too confusing, the state’s Supreme Court ruled Wednesday.

Proportion 207, also called Invest in Education, would have raised the income tax rate on Arizonians who make more than $250,000 a year (or couples who earn more than $500,000) from 4.54 percent to 8 percent. Individuals with income greater than $500,000 or couples who make more than $1 million would have had to relinquish 9 percent of their earnings to the state.

Proponents of the measure, which garnered roughly 270,000 signatures, say it would have raised $690 million for education each year. But the Supreme Court ruled that the petition’s brief description wasn’t worded well and “creates a significant danger of confusion or unfairness.”

For one thing, the court thinks the proposal didn’t accurately portray the tax hike. As the Arizona Republic reports:

The complaint alleged the petitions were misleading because they referred to the proposed tax-rate increase as a “percent” increase and not the more accurate “percentage point” increase. According to the complaint, the tax rate would have seen a 76 and 98 percent increase and not a 3.46 and 4.46 percent increase.

Another problem has to do with tax brackets. In 2014, Arizona passed legislation to index tax brackets, thus ensuring that people don’t face tax hikes if their earnings don’t rise faster than inflation. The ballot initiative would have eliminated this indexing, but the petition didn’t inform potential signees of this fact.

Former Arizona state legislator David Lujan tells The New York Times that the ruling “takes away the voice of the people.” But not everyone agrees. “It’s been a great day for everyone looking out for freedom,” Tom Jenney of Americans for Tax Prosperity tells KSAZ.

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“I Am Angry”: Notley Says Alberta Leaving Federal Climate Plan Over Pipeline Decision

Premier Rachel Notley announced last night that Alberta is pulling out of the national climate plan until the federal government “gets its act together” on the Trans Mountain pipeline expansion.

In a scathing statement, Notley declared that “the time for Canadian niceties is over” and urged Prime Minister Justin Trudeau to recall Parliament for an emergency session to address what she called a crisis that threatens Canada’s sovereignty, CTV reported.

“Albertans are angry. I am angry. Alberta has done everything right and we have been let down,” Notley said.

Notley said she spoke with Trudeau following the Federal Court of Appeal’s decision Thursday to overturn the federal government’s approval of the contentious pipeline expansion. Notley said she urged the prime minister to call the emergency meeting and file an immediate appeal. In the meantime, she said Alberta won’t participate in the national climate plan “until the federal government gets its act together.”

“And let’s be clear: without Alberta, that plan isn’t worth the paper it’s written on,” she said.

The NDP premier insisted that she is still dedicated to growing the economy while protecting the environment. But she said Canada won’t be able to transition to a lower carbon economy without creating jobs that come “from getting fair value for the resources that we own.”

Without the pipeline expansion, Notley said, Canada will continue to rely on exporting its oil through the United States – a scenario she said “no other country on earth would accept.”

“Money that should be going to Canadian schools and hospitals is going to American yachts and private jets. We’re exporting jobs. We’re exporting opportunity. And we’re letting other countries control our economic destiny. We can’t stand for it,” she said quoted by CTV.

If immediate steps are taken, Notley said, there is still hope that construction on the expansion can restart in early 2019. “This absolutely needs to happen,” she said.

Notley didn’t level total blame on the federal government. She said the combined actions of the Harper government, the Trudeau government, the National Energy Board and the Federal Court of Appeal have led to a situation that she called “ridiculous.”

“It was broken in Ottawa, and now Ottawa needs to fix it.”

* * *

Notley’s move is a serious blow to the Liberal climate plan, which includes putting a price on carbon and new clean fuel standards.

Federal Finance Minister Bill Morneau said earlier in the day that the federal government is dedicated to move forward with the Trans Mountain project. “Our government remains committed to ensuring the project proceeds in a manner that protects the public interest,” Morneau said in Toronto.

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The Slants Know What it Takes to Win a Supreme Court Case

|||Facebook/The SlantsContrary to popular belief, you probably won’t see any country music stars by simply walking down Nashville’s Music Row. But if you swing by Bobby’s Idle Hour on 16th Street Ave., you just might catch a musician or two. This is where Simon Tam and Joe Jiang of The Slants, an all-Asian-American dance-rock band, perform on Thursday evening.

Tam, the band’s founder, casually mentions his Supreme Court case onstage. “We were fighting against the U.S. government for the right to use our name,” he says.

The bassist was referring to Matal v. Tam, which was ultimately decided in his band’s favor last year. The high court ruled that federal Patent and Trademark Office (PTO) could not prevent the band from trademarking its name, even if it did “disparage…persons, living or dead, institutions, beliefs, or national symbols, or bring them into contempt, or disrepute.” When Tam sat down with Reason‘s Meredith Bragg a year ago, he explained that the group picked its name, in part, to reclaim an old anti-Asian slur. Both the name and the band were designed to put Asian Americans front and center in an industry that often left them in the background.

So what’s it like to win a Supreme Court case? Tam reflects on the legal battle with Reason after his set.

Regulations, he learned, can do more harm than the thing being regulated. For example, the PTO used offensive imagery—even pictures of Miley Cyrus pulling her eyes back to make a stereotypical “slant”—to explain to a group of Asian Americans that they were really the ones disparaging a community. “The government thought they were doing us a favor by denying us rights,” Tam says.

The court decision’s biggest impact, he says, may just be to have ended a legal battle that nearly spanned a decade. He calls the case “the most frustrating thing in the world,” adding that the “system is not designed for you to win.” Tam advises anyone thinking of challenging the government to start “thinking like an artist and an activist.” The politically and legally inclined tend to think within the realm of possibility, he explains, while artists think more creatively.

Earlier this month, the band formed The Slants Foundation, a nonprofit seeking to provide resources to “Asian Americans looking to incorporate activism into their art,” in an effort to help other artists.

Days before entering the Supreme Court, The Slants released their album The Band Who Must Not Be Named on Martin Luther King Day. The band set up an impromptu concert at the D.C. memorial dedicated to the civil rights leader, and there Tam saw a quote from King: “The arc of the moral universe is long, but it bends towards justice.” Tam agreed, but he also found himself thinking that the arc bends only when people work to bend it.

“It requires people who are intentional. It requires persistence. And it requires a community that’s willing to stand up and say ‘It doesn’t matter how challenging this battle it. It doesn’t matter what kind of hill we have to climb. It is the ultimate goal that’s worth it. Even if it isn’t addressed in our generation, it’s still worth fighting for,'” he says.

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UMich Economic Conditions Worst Since Election As Spending Plans Plunge

Following the preliminary data’s weakness (11-mo lows), the final August University of Michigan Sentiment Index improved modestly (from 95.3 to 96.2) but still the weakest since Jan 2018.

  • Sentiment index decreased to a seven-month low of 96.2 (est. 95.5) from 97.9 in July; preliminary reading was 95.3

  • Current conditions gauge fell to 110.3, the lowest since November 2016, from 114.4 in prior month (prelim. 107.8)

  • Expectations measure decreased to 87.1 from 87.3 (prelim. 87.3)

 

As UMich’s Richard Curtin notes, most of the August decline was in the Current Economic Conditions Index, which fell to its lowest level since November 2016. These results stand in sharp contrast to the recent very favorable report on growth in the national economy.

Consumers’ views of buying conditions have fallen to multi-year lows.

  • Home buying conditions were viewed less favorably than anytime since December 2008

  • Vehicle buying conditions were viewed less favorably than since late 2013;

  • Buying conditions for household durables were viewed less favorably than since late 2015.

The dominating weakness was related to less favorable assessments of buying conditions, mainly due to less favorable perceptions of market prices and to a lesser extent, rising interest rates. Future income and job certainty have become the main reasons cited by consumers for their positive spending views.

This shift from attractive prices and interest rates to income is typical of the later stages of expansions, with references to income and job certainty peaking just before downturns.

The anticipated inflation rate has also increased to its highest level in four years.

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Pat Buchanan: A Cancer On The Papacy

Authored by Patrick Buchanan via Buchanan.org,

“Priests who prey on parochial school children and altar boys are not only sinners, they are criminal predators who belong in penitentiary cells not parish rectories….”

This summer, the sex scandal that has bedeviled the Catholic Church went critical.

First came the stunning revelation that Cardinal Theodore McCarrick, former archbishop of Washington and friend to presidents, had for decades been a predator-priest who preyed on seminarians and abused altar boys, and whose depravity was widely known and covered up.

Came then the report of a Pennsylvania grand jury that investigated six dioceses and found that some 300 priests had abused 1,000 children over the last 70 years.

The bishop of Pittsburgh, Donald Wuerl, now cardinal archbishop of Washington, defrocked some of these corrupt priests, but reassigned others to new parishes where new outrages were committed.

This weekend brought the most stunning accusation.

Archbishop Carlo Maria Vigano, Vatican envoy to the United States under Pope Benedict XVI, charged that Pope Francis had been told of McCarrick’s abuses, done nothing to sanction him, and that, as “zero tolerance” of sexual abuse is Francis’ own policy, the pope should resign.

In his 11-page letter of accusations, Vigano further charged that there is a powerful “homosexual current” among the Vatican prelates closest to the pope.

What did the pope know and when did he know it?

Not unlike Watergate, the issue here is whether Pope Francis knew what was going on in the Vatican and in his Church, and why he was not more resolute in rooting out the moral squalor.

Orthodox, conservative and traditionalist Catholics are the most visible and vocal demanding an accounting. Progressive and liberal Catholics, to whom Pope Francis and Cardinal McCarrick were seen as allies on issues of sexual morality, have been thrown on the defensive.

Now, accusations alone are neither proof nor evidence.

Yet there is an obligation, an imperative, given the gravity of the revelations, that the Vatican address the charges.

When did Pope Francis become aware of McCarrick’s conduct, which appears to have been widely known? Did he let his close friendship with McCarrick keep him from doing his papal and pastoral duty?

This destructive scandal has been bleeding for decades. Too long. The Church is running out of time. It needs to act decisively now.

Priests who prey on parochial school children and altar boys are not only sinners, they are criminal predators who belong in penitentiary cells not parish rectories. They ought to be handed over to civil authorities.

While none of us is without sin, sexually active and abusive clergy should be severed from the priesthood. There needs to be a purge at the Vatican, removing or retiring bishops, archbishops and cardinals, the revelation of whose past misconduct would further feed this scandal.

For too long, the Catholic faithful have been forced to pay damages and reparations for crimes and sins of predator priests and the hierarchy’s collusion and complicity in covering them up.

And it needs be stated clearly: This is a homosexual scandal.

Almost all of the predators and criminals are male, as are most of the victims: the boys, the teenagers, the young seminarians.

Applicants to the seminary should be vetted the way applicants to the National Security Council are. Those homosexually inclined should be told the priesthood of the Church is not for them, as it is not for women.

Secular society will call this invidious discrimination, but it is based on what Christ taught and how he established his Church.

Inevitably, if the Church is to remain true to herself, the clash with secular society, which now holds that homosexuality is natural and normal and entitled to respect, is going to widen and deepen.

For in traditional Catholic teaching, homosexuality is a psychological and moral disorder, a proclivity toward acts that are intrinsically wrong, and everywhere and always sinful and depraved, and ruinous of character.

The idea of homosexual marriages, recently discovered to be a constitutional right in the USA, remains an absurdity in Catholic doctrine.

If the Church’s highest priority is to coexist peacefully with the world, it will modify, soften, cease to preach, or repudiate these beliefs, and follow the primrose path of so many of our separated Protestant brethren.

But if she does, it will not be the same Church that over centuries accepted martyrdom to remain the faithful custodian of Gospel truths and sacred tradition.

And how has the embrace of modernity and its values advanced the religious faiths whose leaders sought most earnestly to accommodate them?

The Church is going through perhaps its gravest crisis since the Reformation. Since Vatican II, the faithful have been departing, some leaving quietly, others embracing agnosticism or other faiths.

“Who am I to judge?” said the pope when first pressed about the morality of homosexuality.

Undeniably, Francis, and the progressive bishops who urge a new tolerance, a new understanding, a new appreciation of the benign character of homosexuality, have won the plaudits of a secular press that loathed the Church of Pius XII.

Of what value are all those wonderful press clippings now, as the chickens come home to roost in Vatican City?

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Chicago PMI Beats Expectations As ‘Soft’ Surveys Shrug Off Dismal ‘Hard’ Data

With ‘hard’ real economic data slumping to its weakest since Nov 2017, ‘soft’ survey-based views of the economy have once again surged, ever-hopeful that the real recovery is right around the corner and stagnation in real wages (as inflation lowers the quality of American-dreamers’ lives) is about to end…

And building on that rising ‘soft’ survey data is today’s Chicago Purchasing Managers Index which, despite dropping from July’s 65.5 level, beat expectations of 63.0 and printed 63.6 (only lowest since April)…

Chicago PMI printed near the middle of the forecast range of 61 – 66.2 from 25 economists surveyed.

The number of components rising vs last month was only 3.

  • Business barometer rose at a slower pace, signaling expansion

  • Prices paid rose at a slower pace, signaling expansion

  • New orders rose at a faster pace, signaling expansion

  • Employment rose at a slower pace, signaling expansion

  • Inventories rose and the direction reversed, signaling expansion

  • Supplier deliveries rose at a slower pace, signaling expansion

  • Production rose at a faster pace, signaling expansion

  • Order backlogs rose at a slower pace, signaling expansion

So production and new orders accelerated BUT employment and prices paid slowed? ok…

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